The hyperbolic cos (cosh) is given by
cosh (x) = (e^x + e^-x) / 2
The slope of a tangent line to a function at a point is given by the derivative of that function at that point.
d/dx [cosh(x)] = d/dx[(e^x + e^-x) / 2] = (e^x - e^-x) / 2 = sinh(x)
Given that the slope is 2, thus
sinh(x) = 2
x = sinh^-1 (2) = 1.444
Therefore, the curve of y = cosh(x) has a slope of 2 at point x = 1.44
Answer:
6
Step-by-step explanation:
3+3=6
This is an inequality.
This is what the statement should look like: 
Now, you can actually "properly" reverse these meaning the equality sign changes too. So basically you can mirror them.
The "mirrored" inequality expression would look like this: 
Now just like normal algebra, you can transpose these terms from 1 side to another and so, -8 would transpose to the right hand side and the operation would be the inverse or in this case, addition. The expression would look something like this: 
Add them up and you get:
:D